IgA concentration and IgA-anti-Fab autoantibody activity were tested in pretransplant sera of 308 kidney graft recipients. Recipients with a serum IgA concentration of 2 g/l or greater had a 1-year graft survival rate of 83%, compared with a 68% rate in recipients with serum IgA of less than 2 g/l (P < 0.005). Serum IgA concentration and IgA-anti-Fab autoantibody activity were significantly associated (r = 0.38, P < 0.0001). Recipients with a high pretransplant IgA-anti-Fab activity had a significantly better graft survival rate (81%) than patients with low pretransplant IgA-anti-Fab (67%, P < 0.025). When IgA-anti-Fab and serum IgA were considered together, 137 recipients with high IgA-anti-Fab and high serum IgA had a 86% 1-year graft survival rate, which was significantly better than the 63% survival rate in patients with low IgA-anti-Fab and low serum IgA (P < 0.0005). The pretransplant serum IgA level and IgA-anti-Fab autoantibody activity were excellent predictors of kidney graft outcome.